Steamboat

AT A GLANCE

Serves 8 - 10 people

1 hour 0 min preparation

8 hours 0 min cooking

"It's your steamboat and you'll steam if you want to," says Dan
Hong. "This list of ingredients is just a guide. It's the stuff my
family likes to have when we eat steamboat and there are usually a
lot of us. Scale up or down the amount of options according to your
taste or budget. The main thing is making sure your stock is
perfect; the rest is up to you. I don't know the origins of supreme
stock, but it's also known as superior stock. It's the base for
shark-fin soup, and since shark-fin has very little flavour, the
dish is nothing without a tasty stock. Supreme stock is also the
basis of many other great soups, so this is a good recipe to
perfect. It's traditionally made with Jinhua ham in China, the
Chinese equivalent of prosciutto, while the rest of the ingredients
vary. Mr Wong's recipe uses smoked ham hocks because they create
that extra dimension of flavour. We also use dried shrimp and
scallops to elevate the umami. Boiler chickens are fantastic to
make stock with because they have a more chickeny flavour. Big
flavour equals tasty stock. Jow Yu and I came up with this recipe
at Ms G's and I've used it ever since. It's a winner. For the
steamboat, it's developed into seasoned supreme stock. Things
you'll need on the table: a portable gas burner, perforated ladle,
soup ladle, a couple of pairs of little tongs and chopsticks." The
supreme stock takes eight hours to cook, but can be made ahead.

For supreme stock, put the chickens, ham hocks, bones and feet into a large stockpot. Cover with cold water and bring to the boil. As soon as it reaches a rolling boil, drain the ingredients into a clean sink, discarding the water. Wash everything under running water to remove impurities and clean the pot. Start the process again by filling the pot with the washed chickens, hocks, bones and feet and covering with cold water. Bring to the boil. Skim off any impurities that rise to the surface using a fine sieve. Reduce the heat to low and bring to a slow simmer. Add the dried shrimp, conpoy, onions and spring onions. Simmer for about 8 hours, skimming occasionally. Strain and refrigerate. Stock can be frozen for up to a year or refrigerated for up to 4 days. For seasoned supreme stock, bring 5 litres of supreme stock to the boil and add salt, sugar and konbu. Taste and adjust the seasoning to your palate. Keep warm.

02

Arrange seafood, meats and vegetables on separate platters. Have another platter for the konnyaku, egg noodles and tofu puffs. Steamboat is all about presentation, so be sure to fan everything out neatly on large platters like an abundant feast.

03

Put stock in a large saucepan that is wide and shallow so everyone can keep an eye on what they’re cooking. Put the saucepan on a portable gas burner in the middle of the table. Turn the burner on high and bring the stock to the boil.

04

Here comes the fun part: everybody puts what they want in the stock and cooks it themselves. Just be careful not to forget what you’ve put in – the seafood and wagyu beef will take less than 5 seconds. The broth will accumulate more and more flavour as the ingredients cook.

05

Have a range of condiments for diners to flavour their bowls of broth. Soy sauce, chopped fresh chillies, fish sauce, XO sauce and lemon wedges are all good. Customising your dipping sauce is the best thing about steamboat so everyone should have a bowl and a dipping-sauce ramekin.

Note Konnyaku noodles, fried tofu puffs, conpoy
(a dried scallop product), beef balls and chrysanthemum are
available from Asian grocers. Konbu extract is available from
Japanese food shops; simmer a large piece of konbu in the stock as
a substitute. This recipe is from Mr Hong ($49.99, hbk),
published by Murdoch Books and has been reproduced with GT
style changes.